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Background

Golden was born in Newark, New Jersey to Jewish parents. He lived in Stuyvesant Village in Union, New Jersey. He moved to South Orange, New Jersey in 1954,where he attended Clinton School and South Orange Junior High School then moved to Maplewood and graduated from Columbia High School. He attended Ohio University for two years then transferred to SUNY Albany, where he graduated with a BA in Philosophy in 1975.[1]

Nonfiction writing

In his 1992 book Quiet Diplomat, Golden described how, in 1975, U.S. President Gerald Ford and U.S. Secretary of State Henry Kissinger asked industrialist and political insider Max Fisher to help heal a diplomatic rift between the United States and Israel over relations with Egypt.[4] He also reported on a 1965 visit Fisher made to U.S. President Dwight D. Eisenhower’s Gettysburg farm during which Eisenhower told him that he regretted pushing Israel to pull out of the Sinai. This fact was essentially unknown to historians until Golden wrote about it, and Fisher’s claim was backed up by President Richard Nixon, who during his interview with Golden said: “Eisenhower. . . in the 1960s told me—and I am sure he told others—that he thought the action that was taken [at Suez] was a mistake.”[5][6]

In 2000, Golden co-wrote a memoir called I Rest My Case, chronicling the life of J. Stanley Shaw, one of the preeminent bankruptcy attorneys in the United States.[7]

Some of his writings have appeared in Detroit Free Press Magazine, New Jersey Monthly, Microsoft eDirections, Beyond Computing, The Forward, and Capital Magazine.[8][9]

His history of the Cold War titled O Powerful Western Star was scheduled to be published in fall 2011.[10]

Fiction writing

In the 1980s, Golden wrote five interactive fiction novels for computers as part of a joint venture between Imagic and Bantam called the Living Literature series. His first interactive computer novel, Another Bow, was a Sherlock Holmes mystery set aboard the S.S. Destiny and was a Waldenbooks best-seller for many weeks.[8]

In March 2011, Comeback Love was purchased for publication by Atria books, an imprint of Simon & Schuster. It was published in early 2012.[11]

His novel Wherever There is Light was scheduled to be published on Nov. 2, 2015 by Atria books, an imprint of Simon & Schuster.[12]

Reactions and criticisms

Writing for 'Commentary' magazine, Leonard Garment, former special counsel to President Richard Nixon, described Golden's Quiet Diplomat as a “meticulously researched and gracefully written book” that “gives us a concrete view of the emergence of American Jews into the mainstream of national politics since World War II.”[13]

Writing for The Jerusalem Report, J.J. Goldberg called Golden’s Quiet Diplomat “a disturbing, challenging book. It suggests, without answering, a wide range of questions about the relationship between the American Jewish community and its ‘leadership,’ and between the Diaspora community and the state of Israel. What is the Jewish community’s role in U.S.-Israel relations? Can Israel trust representatives over whom it has no control? Whom do these “Jewish leaders” represent? In the end, Fisher and [Peter Golden] leave their readers free to draw their own conclusions.”[14]

Criticizing Golden’s Boardside blog, the late[15] John Dornbush, then serving as Guilderland Central School District Board of Education Vice President, told the Times Union (Albany) that the website was inappropriate and that “It shows a lack of respect for others on the board.” On the other hand, Board member Barbara Fraterrigo told the same reporter that Golden's blog is a reflection of free speech in the modern age and is another means to give the public information. New York State School Boards Association spokeswoman Barbara Bradley also told the same reporter that "School board members have a right to speak as individuals" and "This is another vehicle for them."[3]